Gift Card Cozy

Materials: A half ounce or so of worsted weight cotton. Size G crochet hook. Tapestry needle for weaving in ends. Small button (3/8 or 7/16 inch).

Abbreviations:
ch…chain stitch
sc…single crochet
sl st…slip stitch

Special Stitches:

sc2tog: Insert hook through both loops of next sc, yo and pull through, insert hook through both loops of next sc, yo and pull through, yo and pull through all 3 loops on the hook: 1 sc2tog (counts as 1 sc).

Notes: This piece is worked in spirals. Do not join at the end of each round. To use a different size button, simply adjust the width of the buttonhole. You may also want to move it up a row if you do this. This pattern should produce a cozy that fits snugly around your card (assuming it is the size of a standard credit card, which most are). Use a bigger or smaller hook if necessary to achieve the fit you want. No gauge is given because it takes as long to make a swatch as it does to just whip the thing together! 😀

Round 1: Sc in 2nd ch from hook and in each ch across (10 sc). Work 2 more sc in same ch. Turn work clockwise and sc in the unused loop of each ch of the starting chain (9 sc). Work one more sc in the same space. Do not join.

Round 2: Sc in each sc around (22 sc).

Round 3-18: Repeat round 2.

Flap:

Rows 1-5: Ch 1, turn. Sc in each sc across the back of the cozy (11 sc). *Ch 1, turn, sc in each sc across (11 sc)* four times. (Total of 5 rows.)

The Gift Card Cozy crochet pattern is Copyright 2007 by Deborah Ellis. Please do not reproduce this pattern without explicit permission to do so. Please feel free, however, to sell any items that you make from this pattern. If you have any questions at all, please contact the author at neatlytangled@gmail.com. Thank you.

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A note on the patterns:

My patterns are no longer supported. I apologize for this, as I recognize that designers are generally held to a higher standard than that; we've come a long way from the days where spotting an error or some lack of clarity in a magazine left you mid-project, hoping they'd publish errata. My particular situation, however, makes it essential for me to have a blanket policy on this point and step back from these things that I have created and love so much.
I appreciate your understanding and hope very much that these projects go smoothly for you as they have for many, many others.
Take care, and may all of your yarn be free of knots!
Deb